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BIOTECHNOLOGY– Vol. VIII – Conventional Plant Breeding for Higher Yields and Pest Resistance - Roberto García-Espinosa, Raoul A. Robinson CONVENTIONAL PLANT BREEDING FOR HIGHER YIELDS AND PEST RESISTANCE Roberto García-Espinosa Colegio de Postgraduados en Ciencias Agrícolas, Texcoco, México Raoul A. Robinson Retired crop scientist living in Ontario, Canada Keywords: agro-ecosystem, agro-ecotype, ancient clones, antibiotic, beans, bell-curve, biometrics, boom and bust cycle, breakdown of resistance, canola, coffee, complexity theory, crop, cultivars, Darwin, DDT, derris, diseases, domestication, ecotype, erosion of resistance, evolution, Galton, gene, gene-for-gene relationship, genetic code, genetic engineering. Genetics, gene-transfer techniques, grapes, hard sciences, herbicides, horizontal resistance, host, houseflies, Huxley, linear system, macro-evolution, malarial mosquitoes, Mendel, Mendelian genetics, metalaxyl, mice, micro-evolution, molecular biology, non-linear system, normal distribution, one pathotype technique, pathotype, parasite, pedigree breeding, peppers, pests, plant breeding, plant breeding clubs, polygenes, population breeding, potato blight, potatoes, pyrethrum, qualitative genetics, quantitative genetics, rats, recurrent mass selection, resistance, self-organization, soft sciences, soft soap, sugar beet, sugarcane, susceptibility, transgenic resistance, transgressive segregation, Vanderplank, vertical resistance, wheat, yield Contents 1. Introduction 2. Macro-Evolution and Micro-Evolution 3. Domestication 4. The Worldwide Redistribution of Plants 5. Stable and Unstable Protection Mechanisms 6. Quantitative and Qualitative Genetics 7. Quantitative (Horizontal) and Qualitative (Vertical) Resistance 8. The Gene-for-Gene Relationship 8.1 A System of Locking 8.2 The Natural Function of the Gene-For-Gene Relationship UNESCO – EOLSS 8.3 The Break Down of Resistance and the Boom and Bust Cycle of Plant Breeding 9. Vertical Resistance and Horizontal Resistance Compared 9.1 Stability SAMPLE CHAPTERS 9.2 Space 9.3 Profile 9.4 Time 9.5 Cultivars 10. Special Aspects of Horizontal Resistance 10.1 A Second Line of Defense 10.2 Horizontal Resistance is Useful 10.3 Horizontal Resistance is Universal 10.4 Horizontal Resistance is Durable 10.5 The Erosion of Horizontal Resistance ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) BIOTECHNOLOGY– Vol. VIII – Conventional Plant Breeding for Higher Yields and Pest Resistance - Roberto García-Espinosa, Raoul A. Robinson 10.6 Breeding for Horizontal Resistance 10.7 Transgressive Segregation 10.8 On-Site Screening 10.9 Cumulative Progress 10.10 Plant Breeding Clubs 10.11 Successes in Horizontal Resistance Breeding 11. Yield Versus Resistance 12. The Nature of Plant Breeding 12.1 Crop Uniformity 12.2 The Methods of Conventional Plant Breeding 12.3 Conventional Plant Breeding for Higher Yields, Quality, and Resistance 12.4 Conventional Plant Breeding and Genetic Engineering 13. The Future of Conventional Plant Breeding 14. Complexity Theory Glossary Bibliography Biographical Sketches Summary The purpose of conventional plant breeding is to improve (a) the yield, (b) the quality of crop product, (c) the agronomic suitability, and (d) the resistance to the important parasites of the crop in question. The last of these improvements has caused the most difficulty and is emphasized in this article. Macro-evolution is the production of a new genetic code, while micro-evolution is merely the re-arrangement of the existing genetic code. Plant breeding is micro- evolution. All protection mechanisms against parasites are either unstable or stable; that is, they are either within or beyond the capacity for a micro-evolutionary change of the parasite. Unstable mechanisms fail on the appearance of new strains of the parasite, and they are temporary; stable mechanisms do not fail in this way, and they are durable. Resistance to crop parasites is similarly unstable (vertical resistance) and temporary, or stable (horizontal resistance) and durable. Vertical resistance is due to the gene-for-gene relationship and in the wild it functions as a system of locking. This system has been ruined by uniformity in agriculture, and UNESCO – EOLSS vertical resistance is consequently temporary resistance. Its use during the twentieth century led to the “boom and bust” cycle of plant breeding. Horizontal resistance is not SAMPLE CHAPTERS due to a gene-for-gene relationship and it is quantitative in its inheritance and its effects. Vertical resistance is unstable, big space, high profile, small time, and few cultivars. Horizontal resistance is the opposite in these characteristics and is stable, small space, low profile, big time, and many cultivars. Horizontal resistance is a second line of defense. It is also useful, universal, and durable, but it can be eroded. The methods of breeding for horizontal resistance are simple and are described. On site screening, cumulative progress, plant breeding clubs, and past successes with horizontal resistance are described. The possibility of an inverse correlation between yield and resistance is dismissed, and methods of conventional ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) BIOTECHNOLOGY– Vol. VIII – Conventional Plant Breeding for Higher Yields and Pest Resistance - Roberto García-Espinosa, Raoul A. Robinson plant breeding are described. Conventional plant breeding and genetic engineering are compared; conventional breeding for vertical resistance and genetic engineering are both confined to single—gene genetics, and the necessity for many-gene genetics will ensure the continuing importance of conventional breeding. The future of conventional plant breeding may involve a self-organizing system of plant breeding clubs working with horizontal resistance and producing near-perfect cultivars for each agro-ecosystem. 1. Introduction There are four main objectives in conventional plant breeding (see Section 12.4 of this paper). These are the improvement of: t he yield, the quality of crop product, the agronomic suitability, and the resistance to pests and diseases of the crop in question. For the past century, modern plant breeding has been extremely successful, but it has also been dominated by the recurring problem of resistance to pests and diseases (see Section 8.3). Accordingly, much of this discussion about plant breeding involves resistance to crop parasites, but the other three objectives are also considered. 2. Macro-Evolution and Micro-Evolution When Darwin coined the phrase “evolution by natural selection” to explain the origin of species, he made no distinction between two categories of evolution that are now called macro-volution and micro-volution (see Microevolution and Variations in Population Genetics; and section 5 of this paper). Macro-evolution (Greek: macro = large) requires geological time, measured in millions of years, and it produces new species. For example, humans and chimpanzees are different species which had a common ancestor about seven million years ago. Micro-evolution (Greek: micro = small) occurs during periods of historical time, measured in years, and it produces new ecotypes. These ecotypes are variants within a species and they result from differing selection pressures within an ecosystem. Unlike macro-evolution, micro-evolution is reversible. One ecotype can usually be changed into another, and back again, by experimental procedures. UNESCO – EOLSS The basic difference between the two kinds of evolution is that macro-evolution SAMPLE CHAPTERS involves the production of a new genetic code, while micro-evolution involves the rearrangement of the existing genetic code. Possibly the best example of micro- evolution, and the changing of ecotypes, is called industrial melanism. In England, during the industrial revolution, the bark of many trees turned black from the soot in the polluted atmosphere. Some seventy different species of moth, which had superb coloring on clean bark, then became very conspicuous to moth-eating birds when at rest on black bark. In all seventy species, the moths produced new ecotypes that were black. Micro-evolutionary breeding experiments showed that it was quite easy to change black moths into light-colored camouflaged moths, and back again. ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS) BIOTECHNOLOGY– Vol. VIII – Conventional Plant Breeding for Higher Yields and Pest Resistance - Roberto García-Espinosa, Raoul A. Robinson Conventional plant breeding is micro-evolution. It differs from natural micro-evolution in that it is the result of artificial selection, rather than natural selection. Natural micro- evolution produces wild ecotypes. Plant breeding produces agro-ecotypes, otherwise known as crop varieties or cultivars (i.e. cultivated varieties). 3. Domestication Domestication is defined by Allard as “the bringing of a wild species under the management of man,” and it is a form of micro-evolution by artificial selection. In some crops, the process of domestication has continued for so long that it has almost become macro-evolution. An agro-ecotype of a crop that is thousands of years old has often been so altered from the wild form that it is unable to survive in the wild, and its wild progenitors are often difficult to identify. This domestication is a remarkable achievement of the early civilizations. Simmonds argues that the total genetic change achieved by farmers over some nine millennia is probably far greater than that achieved by the scientific efforts of the last two hundred years. Buddenhagen comments that, although many crop varieties are the products of recent scientific breeding, many, surprisingly, are not. It is perhaps a shock to realize that millions of acres of many modern crops are varieties that were selected by ancient farmers, long before agricultural science had developed. Nevertheless, Robinson considers that the success of scientific plant breeding during the twentieth century has been spectacular, with important increases in the yield and quality of many major crops. But he also considers that the frequent failures of crop resistance have created such pessimism that the breeding for resistance has tended to be abandoned. As a consequence, many modern crops are high yielding and of high quality, but they are unduly susceptible to pests and diseases. This susceptibility is the main reason why we now use crop pesticides in very large quantities. 4. The Worldwide Redistribution of Plants People in different parts of the world domesticated different species of plant according to the wild species available. The crops of the New World, for example, were entirely different from those of the Old World. When the European voyages of discovery began in the late fifteenth century, it became possible to redistribute crops around the world, and this was an essential element of crop improvement. Some of the effects were dramatic. Medieval Europe had suffered recurring famines, until New World maize and UNESCO – EOLSS beans were taken to southern Europe, and potatoes and beans to northern Europe. Combined with improving medicine, these new crops allowed the population of Europe SAMPLE CHAPTERS to soar. The resulting wave of cheap labor made the industrial revolution possible and, for the first time, armies began to be measured in millions of men. Similarly, the introduction of wheat and cattle transformed North America, while Old World sugarcane and coffee provided the main source of wealth for Latin America. Red peppers, which originated in Mexico, have become so important in Indian cooking that most Indians believe them to be of Indian origin. Walk onto any farm, anywhere in the world, and many, possibly all, of the crops being grown will be of foreign origin. ©Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (EOLSS)
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